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U of I president:teach only evolution in {University}science classes (Connection to PA court fight)
KGW ^ | 6 Oct 2005 | AP

Posted on 10/06/2005 5:04:43 AM PDT by gobucks

University of Idaho President Tim White has entered the debate pitting Charles Darwin's theories of life against religious-based alternatives by forbidding anything other than evolution from being taught in the Moscow school's life, earth and physical science classes.

White's edict came as a U of I biologist, Scott Minnich, a supporter of the "intelligent design" theory, was set to testify in a Pennsylvania lawsuit brought by eight families trying to have this theory, branded as a new form of creationism, dropped from a school district's biology curriculum. Minnich was asked to testify on behalf of the district.

Hours after White's letter reached students, staff and faculty on Tuesday, the Discovery Institute, a Seattle public policy group that funds research into intelligent design, blasted the order as an unconstitutional assault on academic freedom and free speech.

White said in his letter that teachings of views that differ from evolution may occur in religion, philosophy or similar courses.

Intelligent design is the belief that Darwin's mechanism of natural selection inadequately explains the origins of different life forms. It argues that natural selection fails to fully explain how extremely varied and complex life forms emerged during the past 600 million years. It concludes that guidance from some external intelligence that many interpret as God must be involved.

With Idaho now in the debate, disputes over evolution are unfolding in at least 19 states. In August, President Bush weighed in, saying he thought people should be taught about different ideas — including intelligent design.

Officials at the National Center for Science Education say White is likely the first U.S. university president to come out with an official position. The center advocates against incorporating theories such as intelligent design into science curricula on grounds they introduce religion into the subject matter.

"Departments have issued statements, and scientific groups have issued statements," said Glenn Branch, the Oakland, Calif.-based center's deputy director. "But I can't think of a university president who's issued a statement like this."

White wrote that national media attention on the issue prompted the letter.

"This (evolution) is the only curriculum that is appropriate to be taught in our biophysical sciences," he wrote. "Teaching of views that differ from evolution may occur in faculty-approved curricula in religion, sociology, philosophy, political science or similar courses. However, teaching of such views is inappropriate in our life, earth, and physical science courses."

Harold Gibson, a school spokesman, said the views of Minnich, a tenured professor in the school's College of Agriculture, didn't prompt the letter.

Rather, White was staking out a position on an issue that's emerged as a successor to "creationism" after that Biblical explanation was barred from the nation's schoolhouses in 1987 by the U.S. Supreme Court.

Minnich didn't return Associated Press calls for comment.

But members of the Discovery Institute — founded in 1990 by Bruce Chapman, a former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations Organizations in Vienna under President Reagan — lambasted White's edict as an intrusion into the academic freedom of Idaho professors.

John West, the associate director of the institute's Center for Science and Culture, said White's move restricting science curricula to discussions of evolution broadly restricts teaching anything that contradicts Darwin's ideas on the role of mutation and natural selection in the development of life — even by scientists not advocating intelligent design.

In addition, limiting classes where evolution alternatives can be discussed violates free speech protections, he said.

"He (White) is saying, 'If you're a teacher in philosophy, we may allow you to do this. But in science, it just doesn't cut it,' West said. "In any other area, this would be preposterous."

White's letter came just a week before Eugenie C. Scott, an activist who's fought to segregate creationism and intelligent design from science classes, is due to speak at the University of Idaho on Oct. 12.

Scott said the school's science faculty, who invited her, haven't explicitly mentioned Minnich as motivation for bringing her for a lecture titled "Why Scientists Reject Intelligent Design."

Still, "the elephant in the living room is: there is a proponent of intelligent design on the faculty of the University of Idaho," said Scott, executive director of the National Center for Science Education. "Biologists across the country have examined intelligent design as a scientific model, and found it seriously lacking."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News
KEYWORDS: crevolist; darwin; intelligentdesign
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To: CarolinaGuitarman
I didn't say science can answer everything. Please reread what I said.
"They can never admit, for example, that any cause of evolutionary change is unknown or unknowable. "
Why admit to something that is false?


That is exactly what you are saying. If science cannot answer something it is because it is not knowable for some reason. If course, science can speculate endlessly but I don't consider that type of "science" to be worthy of the credibility we rightfully give to the hard sciences.
61 posted on 10/06/2005 9:57:53 AM PDT by Ford4000
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To: CarolinaGuitarman

You obviously can't tell propaganda when you hear it. Mein Kampf is a work of political propaganda.


62 posted on 10/06/2005 10:01:37 AM PDT by Ford4000
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To: Ford4000
"That is exactly what you are saying"

No it wasn't, reread it again. I never said science can answer everything. It CAN however answer a great many things, like whether common descent is correct and what processes evolution most likely used. It cannot *prove* these things, but then again no science can prove it's claims.

"If science cannot answer something it is because it is not knowable for some reason."

No, it means we don't know the answer yet. ID says that we will never know the answers, but provides no evidence to back this up. I don't know what the limits of human knowledge are, and nobody else does. We certainly haven't approached those limits yet though. ID would have us throw up our hands and say *We will never know*. It's defeatism at it's worst, giving up without trying.

"If course, science can speculate endlessly but I don't consider that type of "science" to be worthy of the credibility we rightfully give to the hard sciences."

Which is why ID is not science and has no place in a science classroom.
63 posted on 10/06/2005 10:13:23 AM PDT by CarolinaGuitarman ("There is a grandeur in this view of life...")
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To: Ford4000
"You obviously can't tell propaganda when you hear it. Mein Kampf is a work of political propaganda."

It was his personal feelings. It is the best look we have at his sick mind; his later pronouncements really don't contradict what excerpted anyway. You obviously can't handle the truth; Hitler was a creationist.
64 posted on 10/06/2005 10:16:04 AM PDT by CarolinaGuitarman ("There is a grandeur in this view of life...")
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To: Rudder
It has nothing to do with philosophy but the clear difference between empirical observation and mere conjecture.

1) The practice of science is impossible without an underlying philosophy of science. Your positivistic assumptions are neither themselves empirically verifiable nor logically undeniable. 2) If scientific methodology were strictly restricted to what is observable, then you couldn't even call much of theoretical physics that refer to unverifiable and unobservable things like forces, fields, and universal laws, "scientific", but the postulation of such entities is no less the product of scientific inquiry because of that. A design postulate is no less scientific than is a evolutionary postulate when it comes to making inferences about the unobservable past. Both rely on indirect observation and inference, as opposed to direct observation.

Cordially,

65 posted on 10/06/2005 10:49:20 AM PDT by Diamond (Qui liberatio scelestus trucido inculpatus.)
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To: Rudder
It has nothing to do with philosophy but the clear difference between empirical observation and mere conjecture.

1) The practice of science is impossible without an underlying philosophy of science. Your positivistic assumptions are neither themselves empirically verifiable nor logically undeniable. 2) If scientific methodology were strictly restricted to what is observable, then you couldn't even call much of theoretical physics that refer to unverifiable and unobservable things like forces, fields, and universal laws, "scientific", but the postulation of such entities is no less the product of scientific inquiry because of that. A design postulate is no less scientific than is a evolutionary postulate when it comes to making inferences about the unobservable past. Both rely on indirect observation and inference, as opposed to direct observation.

Cordially,

66 posted on 10/06/2005 10:49:23 AM PDT by Diamond (Qui liberatio scelestus trucido inculpatus.)
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To: CarolinaGuitarman

In any practical sense we will never know what caused like to appear as it does. The strawman auguement that no science can be proved is really an attempt to elevate evolution science far above what it deserves because hard science can be reproduced in the lab while the history of a few million years ago cannot - certainly not to the level of being called (in its entirety) a fact worthy of silencing all other inquiry.

There is absolutely nothing wrong with critiquing evolution in the classroom as long as it is acedemically serious.


67 posted on 10/06/2005 10:54:45 AM PDT by Ford4000
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To: CarolinaGuitarman

If course, a power-mad genocidal maniac would never LIE to achieve power. Get a grip.


68 posted on 10/06/2005 10:56:59 AM PDT by Ford4000
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To: Ford4000
"If course, a power-mad genocidal maniac would never LIE to achieve power. Get a grip."

He wouldn't be lying if he believed it. There is no evidence he didn't. There are just your feelings. Sorry, doesn't cut it.
69 posted on 10/06/2005 11:13:55 AM PDT by CarolinaGuitarman ("There is a grandeur in this view of life...")
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To: Ford4000
"In any practical sense we will never know what caused like to appear as it does."

I assume you mean to say *life*. In a practical sense we can know a great deal about what caused life to appear as it does, your incredulity not withstanding.

"The strawman auguement that no science can be proved is really an attempt to elevate evolution science far above what it deserves because hard science can be reproduced in the lab while the history of a few million years ago cannot - certainly not to the level of being called (in its entirety) a fact worthy of silencing all other inquiry."

It's not a straw-man, it's a fact. No theories in science are ever proved.

"There is absolutely nothing wrong with critiquing evolution in the classroom as long as it is acedemically serious."

ID isn't academically serious. It's a joke, on both science and religion.
70 posted on 10/06/2005 11:18:39 AM PDT by CarolinaGuitarman ("There is a grandeur in this view of life...")
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To: CarolinaGuitarman

"No evidence he didn't."

What lame nonsense. Hitler was attempting to exploit popular prejudices like as politicians do today. The philisophy is called utilitarianism.



71 posted on 10/06/2005 11:23:29 AM PDT by Ford4000
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To: CarolinaGuitarman
It's not a straw-man, it's a fact. No theories in science are ever proved.

Dance all you want, evolution is not Boyle's Law.
72 posted on 10/06/2005 11:38:20 AM PDT by Ford4000
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To: Ford4000

> What happened can never be determined with any accuracy so it is all a waste of time

Are you refering to criminal forensic investigations as well?

"No convictions without a confession."


73 posted on 10/06/2005 11:51:18 AM PDT by orionblamblam ("You're the poster boy for what ID would turn out if it were taught in our schools." VadeRetro)
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Comment #74 Removed by Moderator

To: Ford4000
"What lame nonsense. Hitler was attempting to exploit popular prejudices like as politicians do today. The philisophy is called utilitarianism."

No, he believed it. He got these beliefs from the Viennese Christian Social movement. You're inability to face reality is not evidence, and is such lame nonsense.

BTW, the philosophy you were searching for is not *utilitarianism*. That's the greatest good for the greatest number.
75 posted on 10/06/2005 12:02:20 PM PDT by CarolinaGuitarman ("There is a grandeur in this view of life...")
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To: Ford4000
" Dance all you want, evolution is not Boyle's Law."

It's just as strong. Boyle's *law*, BTW, has not been proved.
76 posted on 10/06/2005 12:03:49 PM PDT by CarolinaGuitarman ("There is a grandeur in this view of life...")
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To: willstayfree

" This is opposite to applied science, which evolution would be a subset of."

Evolution is both a *pure* and *applied* science, like all the ones you listed for both sides are. It's an artificial distinction.


77 posted on 10/06/2005 12:06:01 PM PDT by CarolinaGuitarman ("There is a grandeur in this view of life...")
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To: doc30
My point is that Bacon believed in limiting the science to essentially experiments that could be done in a lab. He didn't take into consideration that the scientific method does extend beyond the lab and beyond to the immediately observable. Historical sciences are just as valid. They make testable predictions. Astronomy, cosmology, geology and paleontology all fit this description.

I totally agree, but for the very same reasons regarding the historical character of origins science I disagree that "science will have to change to incorporate the supernatural for ID to fit." It is simply circular to exclude the postulation of nonmechanistic (mental or intelligent) agency in scientific origins theories based soley on an exclusively naturalistic definition of science. All historical theories depend on making inferences based on indirect observations in an attempt to reconstruct past conditions or causes from present facts. Excluding intelligent agency in an objective historical investigation a priori based merely on a naturalistist philosophy makes about as much sense as saying that a homocide detective is not being scientific because he attributes the cause of the dead body to some intelligent agency rather than the result of some accidental mechanism. One hypothesis or the other may turn out to be true, but one cannot say that either hypothesis and/or the investigation is not a scientific one, or using a scientific methodology. In fact, if the detective ruled out any possiblity of agency a priori he would never find the murderer, if indeed the death was the result of murder.

Cordially,

78 posted on 10/06/2005 12:14:10 PM PDT by Diamond (Qui liberatio scelestus trucido inculpatus.)
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To: CarolinaGuitarman

Seems to be a lot of crickets chirping ... well done, sir...


79 posted on 10/06/2005 12:16:00 PM PDT by jonathanmo
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Comment #80 Removed by Moderator


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